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Rep. John Garamendi

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Millions of Acres of Land You Inherited Are at Risk

Posted: 09/21/11 05:16 PM ET

Maybe you weren't born with a silver spoon in your mouth, but like every American, you carry a deed to 635 million acres of public lands.

That's right. Even if you don't own a house or the latest computer on the market, you own Yosemite, Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and many other natural treasures. It's one of the greatest benefits of being an American, and it's one reason we are celebrating Great America Outdoors Week.

Starting with President Teddy Roosevelt, you can thank leaders from both parties over the decades for the privilege. But this benefit is in danger of being sharply cut back. Congress has started debating a number of bills that would allow oil companies, the timber and mining industries, and other special interests to turn many of these special places into profit centers.

I am most concerned about H.R. 1581 (and its Senate counterpart, S. 1087), not-so-fondly known as "the Great American Giveaway" bill. Introduced by Congressman Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield, the third-ranking Republican in the House leadership, it would eliminate protection for more than 60 million acres of your land. For example, 4.4 million undeveloped acres in California's national forests, in the Sierra Nevada and elsewhere, would become eligible for road building and logging.

Recently, two members of my staff flew over hundreds of acres of Sierra Nevada public lands, including ecologically invaluable old growth forests, that would be exposed to roads and logging if H.R. 1581 became law. From an aerial view, the difference between lands logged and lands preserved is stark. When we tear down lands we borrow from our grandchildren, getting them back is near impossible.

Take this example: the Bodie Mountains near Lake Tahoe, would be open to gold mining interests that have been lobbying to develop and open pit gold mine next to this historic ghost town and wildlife haven. Also at risk would be spectacular areas that you own up north along our Lost Coast.

It makes no sense. At a time when we need places where we can escape the rat race and find peace and quiet, we should not be industrializing them. Many experts point out that outdoor recreation is increasingly important for jobs and economic development and a great way to help us fight obesity and other health problems.

But there is much more at stake than world-class recreation -- kayaking, camping, fishing, birding, hiking. Our national forests, for instance, provide drinking water for more than 123 million Americans. The lands that all of us own also scrub the air, making it cleaner, and help us combat climate change by absorbing and storing carbon. They also provide habitat that fish and wildlife need if they are to survive.

Among the strongest opponents of this legislation are the men and women who make a living in the recreation and tourism fields. The outdoor recreation industry supports nearly 6.5 million jobs and contributes $730 billion annually to the U.S. economy. Rural communities need these jobs -- ones that are not subject to boom-and-bust and that cannot be outsourced.

Sadly, the McCarthy bill is not the only bill that threatens our inheritance. There are several proposals that would cripple a century-old law called the Antiquities Act. You may never have heard of it, but this statute enabled 15 presidents to take swift action to protect Americans' lands when they were in jeopardy, without waiting for legislation to wend its way through Congress.

President Herbert Hoover used the Antiquities Act to protect Death Valley. FDR can take credit for the Channel Islands. Bill Clinton signed the order creating Giant Sequoia National Monument. The list of places saved by this law includes the Grand Canyon, the Grand Tetons, and Denali National Park.

We are losing open space at an alarming rate. It is critical that we protect the green places we have and fight to maintain balance in the laws and policies that determine how our lands are managed.

Congress can do just that by focusing instead on legislation that would create wilderness areas by adding worthy lands that we own to the National Wilderness Preservation System. No state has more wilderness initiatives in motion than California, with four bills under consideration. Senator Dianne Feinstein is championing a proposal that would preserve 1.6 million acres of the Mojave Desert. It would expand Joshua Tree and Death Valley national parks and the Mojave National Preserve. Senator Barbara Boxer submitted a bill enlarging the Pinnacles Wilderness and upgrading Pinnacles National Monument to a national park.

But this is not strictly a Democratic undertaking. One bill, protecting 21,000 acres of Beauty Mountain and Agua Tibia in north San Diego County, was authored by GOP Congressman Darrell Issa. Fellow Republican David Dreier has introduced a measure to add 18,000 acres to the Sheep Mountain and Cucamonga wilderness areas in the San Gabriel Mountains.

With so much congressional action involving the people's lands, this is an appropriate time to celebrate National Public Lands Day. It encourages all of us to help in organized activities that spruce up parks, plant trees, and maintain trails. It is also an opportunity to celebrate this inheritance and to commit ourselves to protecting this extraordinary natural legacy. As Theodore Roosevelt once put it: "The nation behaves well if it treats the natural resources as assets which it must turn over to the next generation increased, and not impaired, in value."

 

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12:54 PM on 10/06/2011
The Great Outdoors Giveaway Bill is the most serious attack to our treasured Colorado landscapes in decades. It would undo existing protections for Colorado's Wilderness Study Areas and Roadless Areas, opening up hundreds of thousands of areas across Colorado to bulldozers, chainsaws and dirtbikes.

Write to your Senators and Representative today and help us stop this bad Bill!

www.ourcolorado.org/GreatOutdoorsGiveaway
08:23 PM on 09/26/2011
Government owns and controls too much. If government can't generate revenue with a portion of its' holdings, then it can let private enterprise do so. All government revenues do not have to be from taxing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whirlpool
founder walnut tree congregation
10:27 AM on 09/25/2011
For those committed to Republicanism for other reasons but are interested in protecting the environment, there is a small but effective Republican organization they can support called Republicans for Environmental Protection (REP). This organization does good work.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:28 AM on 09/25/2011
If you want change that's good for the average citizens, like protecting our public land, stop voting for the GOP/TEA and the DLC the are all Reaganomics privatizers.

The Obama DLC are enablers of the GOP agenda because they sold their souls to get elected. They are Reagan democrats, moderate republicans if you will. AKA New democrats, pragmatic Progressive, Blue dogs, New American Foundation, Progressive Policy Council, Third Way.

Vote for the CPC progressives, The Progressive Democrats of America, the Kucinich folks in the primaries. Vote the Dems in the general.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
07:54 PM on 09/24/2011
The lands Mr. Garamendi are referring to are, this nation's share of the living, life creating Earth or the planet's ecosystems. Ecosystems are in the eco-nomics of life.

Ecosystems release oxygen, balance the gaseous composition of the atmosphere, sequester C02, naturally moderate and regulate the climate, create and renew a life sustaining soil, create the nitrogen cycle, the hydrological system, decomposition, seed dispersal, the purification of the air and water, mitigation of floods, pollination, 75% of all new medicines, 99% of all pest control and the regulation and trimming of disease pathogens in the food chain with man, like emerging viruses that cause global, disease pandemics. The Earth's frogs do this for mankind, and they are falling extinct, globally!

All ecosystems are interconnected and all have feedbacks and loops to the atmosphere and the climate, and they all work together to create the very life zone of the Earth or the biosphere/ecosphere. The destruction of these ecosystems is as dangerous as it gets for man and the Earth.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
05:07 PM on 09/24/2011
Mr. Garamendi...do you have a phone nimber, and will you share it ???

When we tear down lands we borrow from our grandchildren, getting them back is near impossible.

we are "borrowing" nothing from our grandchilden...we are STEALING IT from them !!!!!!...there are many ways that more land can be saved !!!!!!...they are callid: ALTERNATIVES !!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Var Enyo
My micro-bio didn't meet their demands...
11:36 PM on 09/23/2011
And here I thought McCarthy was only working to maintain the second worst air quality in the nation. Not only do the corporate powers want control over all the money, they want all the land with no restrictions on use. The cretins in teahag party will be touting the money that is made from the sale but you can bet that the sales will not only be limited to certain parties but will be for pennies on the dollar of actual land value.
07:25 PM on 09/21/2011
Why no mention of the 22,000,000 acre golden public lands give away to industrial solar developers by the Department of Interior? Despite the growing reality that point of use renewable energy in our VAST urban environment is faster, cheaper, smarter and far less harmful to our precious public lands. Alternatively, the EPA has identified more than 15,000,000 acres of already degraded lands that are suitable for utility scale solar in its Re-powering America study. Contrary to so called environmentalist rhetoric, destroying vast areas ecologically valuable public lands to save ourselves from climate change is not a necessary trade-off. Its just business as usual.
12:36 PM on 09/22/2011
There are several information sources on the impacts of industrial green energy. The Obama Administration has made focused attacks on not only desert tortoise habitat to approve these solar farms (all which take up 5 square miles of land), but has also weakened environmental protections under the Endangered Species Act. Placing solar panels in remote locations is just plain stupid because up to 15 percent of the power would be lost in transmission. Commuters would burn C02 just to get to work. Construction of a massive solar farm will use big earth movers, all which burn multiple tons of fossil fuel. A big solar photovoltaic farm creates only ten full time jobs. An economy that promotes distributed energy will sustain itself with jobs much longer. Obama's solar boondoggles will create some construction jobs right around the 2012 election, but these are temporary. Full time jobs for the California solar boondoggles alone willl probably be around 200 or 300. That will not save the economy.

The Obama Administration took something good like solar energy and turned it into one of the biggest environmental threats in history. They obviously could care less about climate change approving the mid west pipeline.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
08:04 PM on 09/24/2011
Yes, you two are so correct. Any agent that kills ecosystems, the lands of which Mr. Garamendi refers to, essentially kills that portion of the Earth, whether it is for construction of a pipeline, oil rig, windmill factories or dead solar panel fields -- regardless!

Ecosystems naturally moderate and regulate the climate. Once the construction begins and the soil is disturbed and the chain saws go at it, the sequestered heat trapping gases are released, defeating any and all endeavors to mitigate climate change! Bare soil is hotter than a forested plot, and according to science, the extinctions of biological diversity, like the desert tortoise, is about as safe for Earth and man as thermonuclear war.

Brilliant commentary Tangle and Kevin. You two have your thinking caps on.